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I put this article in the category Info, but I don't know whether this is ok. I'd appreciate, if there where ideas for another or for a new category, where such articles fit better. Suggestions which other articles should be in such a category are welcome, too.
--Erik Krause 21:23, 30 April 2008 (CEST)

Hmm, I'd say it seems like a school lesson explaining how things work. I can imagine at least 2 subclasses fort this kind: Lessons explaining how it technically works and lessons explaining how to shoot/choose a composition. These are not tutorials, because a tutorial tells you step by step how to do a job. Possible titles for the category that come to mind are: Classroom, Lectures, Primers, Howitworks, Understanding. A native english speaker could probably come up with the word that says it all. So you'd get something like:

Classroom:Stitcher technology

Classroom:Panorama photography

This page would be in the first category. The second category would be good for e.g. composition tips and tips on setting up your camera.
--Serge 13:18, 1 May 2008 (CEST)

I'd say it is an introduction to stitching, and the almost top of a pyramid. Prior to it is shooting, and after it is publishing. This one is Stitching. I second Serge's idea. I'm no native language speaker and have no alternative keywords to offer. I'd prefer "HowItWorks".

IMO it would make sense to add list of links under each step of the process (remapping, exposure, blending), to

related tutorials/"HowTo"

more detailed HowItWorks

software used or, better, to a comparison of them

If the above exist.

I would remove the time element from it (2008). If a time element is needed, I'd put it into a blog, and just keep here the latest version. Could be interesting to have a "historical" timeline of stitching later on.

Last but not least, I'd link this page, once it is the top of the pyramid described above, on the Main Page, where there are three automated site overviews (which I'd rather put in the end, like books have their (automated) index at the end and link this page inside "Working with the Panorama Tools". This page shows to the new reader what advantage he will get if he dwelves into reading the details of the wiki and belongs IMO even before the "Getting started" page.

What does a native speaker think about Background? Or is How it works better?
--Erik Krause 20:18, 1 May 2008 (CEST)

I am certainly happy to have this writeup interlinked with other pages. On purpose I did not mention that I used hugin and enblend for this work, as I thought that it should be a generic write-up. Nevertheless I am happy to have this discussed if one feels to add a footnote telling about the tools used.

Regarding the year, I feel it is worth to have this as a snapshot in time (as well). Although I do not mention it, the alignment is to subpixels but not perfect (I believe it is not parallax error). The seam finding of enblend is non-perfect - if one knows where to look on sees an offset in a vertical line. I would not rename this page, but I would be more than happy to have to contents copied to another page. Maybe State of the Art Stitching? Not 100% sure about the name.

Obviously one can complement this page with a (how this was achieved)-page, but that would come close to duplicating the already existing two images tutorials. I also could show the result of the intelligent seam finding and so on, as I do have these images on file back at home.

I have added:

At the time of photography, a few points have been observed
that make these photos good raw material for proper stitching.

which should link to concise guidelines of what is necessary - and what not -
for images to be stitched. Maybe I find some time to start such a page. --Klaus 17:12, 2 May 2008 (CEST)

I have reworked this article into How Stitching Works. It is the page to show if I want to explain how stitching works. This page here is if I need to make the point why not to use simple photoshopping. -- Klaus 01:42, 3 May 2008 (CEST)

And I note that so far there is no wiki page here called Stitching. -- Klaus 23:48, 2 May 2008 (CEST)

Pages with almost identical content (merged from Talk:How Stitching Works)

Thanks Klaus, for the rework of the "State of the art" page. However, I don't like the idea of having two pages with almost identical content.

On Talk:Stitching_2008_State_of_the_Art#Overall picture you mentioned that the pages should serve different purposes. However, I consider it better to have all text in one page, perhaps with a paragraph on what special steps are not available if one uses only photoshop or something like that.

Just a note: Wiki page titles are case insensitive only for the first letter. So if the title is "How stitching works" is can be linked easier directly in the wiki text, since you don't need to create a link like [[How Stitching Works|how stitching works]]

So I vote for one page named "How stitching works" with all the content from both of the other pages. (I must admit, that i was about to it already, whe I noticed your talk page additions - I reverted the changes again). There can be redirects in order not to break links to "Stitching 2008 State of the Art" and "How Stitching Works"...

As for your note that there is no page called "Stitching": I'll create a short page in the glossary category...

best regards and thanks again for your contributions!
--Erik Krause 14:52, 4 May 2008 (CEST)

Pages with large overlap

There are pages with large overlap, however, I think, they serve different purposes.

should be the active page, with improvements added as they occur in future

Because it is How stitching works that should be edited in future, and hence should be more visible, the Talk page from Stitching 2008 State of the Art redirects to here. -- Klaus 14:15, 6 May 2008 (CEST)